Dramatic illustration depicting Coupang data breach suspect, surging U.S. lawsuit, and South Korean president's push for stricter penalties.
Dramatic illustration depicting Coupang data breach suspect, surging U.S. lawsuit, and South Korean president's push for stricter penalties.
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Coupang breach suspect identified amid foreign hiring scrutiny and lawsuit surge

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New details emerge in the Coupang data breach saga: a former Chinese developer is the prime suspect, raising alarms over foreign worker vetting. A U.S. class-action suit gains over 2,300 applicants, while President Lee Jae Myung pushes for harsher data leak penalties.

Police have named a former Chinese developer, employed for two years with access to key security systems, as the main suspect in the Coupang breach exposed last month. Industry experts call this access unusual, spotlighting risks in the U.S.-listed firm's hiring of about 1,000 foreign workers in Korea via flexible D-7 and D-8 visas—10% of its local staff—exacerbated by remote work.

Building on earlier U.S. law firm probes into securities issues and stock drops following disclosures and a key resignation, a class-action in New York's Southern District now has 2,346 applicants, led by SJKP LLP. It targets governance lapses, distinct from Korean cases.

On December 12, President Lee Jae Myung, at a Personal Information Protection Commission briefing, advocated fines up to 3% of peak annual sales (potentially 10% for severe cases), amid Coupang's 24.7 million Q3 active users.

Was die Leute sagen

X discussions criticize Coupang's hiring of a former Chinese developer suspected in the massive data breach, sparking anti-foreign worker sentiment and national security fears; users debate President Lee Jae-myung's calls for harsher punitive fines up to 10% of revenue; financial fallout including CEO resignation and stock drops is noted; some suspect Chinese competition benefits; U.S. class-action lawsuits gain traction amid scrutiny.

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Boardroom scene of Coupang executives facing Q1 net loss and data breach fallout.
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Coupang swings to Q1 net loss amid data breach fallout

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U.S.-listed e-commerce giant Coupang swung to a net loss in the first quarter amid fallout from a massive customer data breach in South Korea. The company posted a $266 million deficit for January-March, compared with a $114 million profit a year earlier. Founder and Chairman Bom Kim said one-time vouchers and temporary inefficiencies from weaker demand were key factors.

In the latest escalation of tensions over South Korea's probe into Coupang's massive data breach, more than 80 ruling bloc lawmakers plan to send a joint letter protesting the US government's defense of the e-commerce giant, arguing it infringes on judicial sovereignty. The letter responds to recent US complaints, including demands for the safety of Coupang's chairman and a letter from over 50 Republican lawmakers.

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U.S. lobbying reports show Coupang spent $1.09 million in the first quarter targeting the White House, Vice President, and Congress. This follows a major data leak scandal in South Korea last November. Though headquartered in Seattle and U.S.-incorporated, the company primarily operates in Korea.

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